Pythagoras

The Philosopher

"Orphism is said to have taught that the soul and body are
united by an unequal compact; the soul is divine, immortal and
aspires to freedom, while the body holds it imprisoned. Death
dissolves this compact, but only to re-imprison the liberated soul
after a short time; for the wheel of birth revolves relentlessly.
Thus the soul continues its journey, alternating between a separate
unrestrained existence and fresh reincarnation, as the companion of
many bodies of men and animals."
"The earliest Greek we can connect to Orphism is the sixth
century thinker, Pherecydes. But it was Pherecydes' pupil, the
great mathematician and philosopher Pythagoras, who was the first
famous exponent and who was the individual most responsible for
spreading Orphism throughout Greece."

- "Orphism, Return to the Gods" in Advance,
Issue 119

"Pythagoras was born on Samos about 570 B.C., a century
before the golden age of classical Greece. His father is thought to
have been a gem-engraver, and it is likely that the son would have
been trained in that same craft..."

- George Galt, Trailing Pythagoras

"During a short journey to Egypt, when being a young man of
22, Thales (the reknown Greek philosopher) suggested him to study
in Egypt to enlarge his knowledge. On his return to Greece, he
prepared himself to travel to Tyre in Lebanon, apparently because
of a commercial connection of his father. There, he was initiated
for the first time into the 'Ancient Mysteries' of the
Phoenicians and studied for about 3 years in the temples of Tyre,
Sidon, and Byblos. From there, he navigated to Egypt, the source of
the 'Ancient Mysteries'. On the road, he lingered for a
while in the gulf of Haifa at a temple on Mount Carmel, Israel
(after the destruction of the First Jewish Temple of Jerusalem). In
Egypt, he was initiated and studied for about 22 years. Apparently,
he studied for another 13 years in Babylon as well, while he was
captured on his way back from Egypt to Greece."

"As he grew older...revulsion apparently set in, possibly
at the excesses of the pirate king [Polycrates], and around 530
B.C. he emigrated to Croton, a leading Greek colony in southern
Italy."

- George Galt, Trailing Pythagoras

Pythagoras "founded there the famous Pythagorean school of
philosophy, mathematics, and natural sciences. People from
different classes came to his school to hear his lectures. Among
them, women, even though the law in those days forbade them to
participate in public meetings. He gathered the more talented
disciples and established a brotherhood preaching the simple life,
modesty, austerity, patience, and self-control. They consumed
vegetarian dried and condensed food and unleavened bread (as
matzos, used by the Biblical Jewish priestly class and used today
in Passover)....It is also mentioned that they did not cut their
hair, beard, and nails."

"...The school continued to subsist till the revolution of
the democratic party at southern Italy. Their members were against
the aristocratic tendency of the school and destroyed their
buildings. Pythagoras himself, apparently escaped and later was
murdered by his opposers."

His Teachings

"Pythagoras...as we know, never allowed his neophytes to
see him during the years of probation, but instructed them from
behind a curtain in his cave."

- H. P. Blavatsky, Isis Unveiled

This was the method of communication employed by HebrewPatars
(dream interpreters).

The Pythagorians "practiced mathematics, vegetarianism, and
a firm illiteracy - to write things down was a source of error.
Among these teachings...was the doctrine of the transmigration of
souls. After death, a man's soul enters the body of a newborn
infant or animal and so lives another life."

- Julian Jaynes, The Origin of Consciousness in the
Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind

The soul "wanders from the home of the blessed,
being born into all kinds of mortal forms, passing from one
laborious path of life to another. I am also one of these, an exile
and a wanderer from the Gods."
"Ere now, I too have been a boy, a girl, a bush, a bird, and a
scaly fish in the sea."

- Empedocles

"Pythagoras was also one of the earliest Greek thinkers,
following up hints from Anaximenes and Heraclitus, to attach
(ethical) significance to the human soul, thus heralding the shift,
accelerated by Socrates, of the center of philosophical studies
from the universe to human beings: in whom Pythagoras was the soul
as a harmonizing principle. But he also - and here Indian
influences, transmitted though Persia, can be detected - saw it as
a fallen, polluted divinity incarcerated within the body, as in a
tomb, and destined to a cycle of reincarnations (methempsychosis)
from which it can obtain release through ritual purgation,
accompanied by ascetic abstinence associated with the worship of
Apollo 'the purifier'. (Indeed, Pythagoras was also said to
have adopted the idea, current in Scythia and Thrace under the
title of Orphism, of a process of bilocation, according to which
the soul could be temporarily detached from the body.) This
redemptive purification would enable the soul to achieve harmony
with the order and proportion of the universe. And human beings, he
maintained, could reach this goal by pure thought."

- Michael Grant, The Classical Greeks

"Apart from his famous geometric theorem, Pythagoras is
also credited with the discovery of the numerical ratios which
determine the concordant scale."
"Numbers were considered somehow to have substance. Through
them a divine order was imposed on the world, invisible to the eye
but discernible by the mind."

- George Galt, Trailing Pythagoras

"Their cosmology built the world out of number, one for a
point, two for a line, three for a surface, four for a solid. One
was the basis, and generated the series of even and odd numbers,
and with them the whole universe. Moral qualities were numbers: 4
(2x2 and 2+2) was justice, equal shares all round. A special number
was 10, built up of 1+2+3+4, and containing the point, line, plane,
and solid; it was known as the tetractys and the oath
not to reveal the mysteries of the society was 'by Him who
reveals Himself to our minds in the Tetractys, which contains the
source and roots of everlasting nature'. Pythagoras had
discovered the mathematical basis of music, and (for instance) the
fact that an octave can be expressed by the relation 1:2 (a string
stopped at half its length will sound the octave above the full
length.) So music was involved in all life; and even the planets
circling in their courses sounded the music of the spheres. To such
a mystical cosmology the discovery of an incommensurable such as
the square root of 2 was a major scandal, a skeleton in the
cupboard; and one Hippasus was excommunicated for revealing the
secret."

- John Ferguson, An Illustrated Encyclopaedia of Mysticism
and the Mystery Religions

"The Pythagorean brotherhood was one of the world's
earliest unpriestly cooperative scientific societies, if not the
first, and that its members invented the 'Multiplication
Table' and raised important scientific problems which were
solved only 1500 years later. On the tombs of some of them, one
could find carved geometric tools as quadrant, square, cubit, and
level."